The female uterus usually does not grow a herring. It’s usually sharp and wet. Shrimp is an infectious virus that mainly infringes on the skin tissues and mucous membranes of the human body, most of which do not violate visceral mucous membranes of the internal organs, so that the uterus generally does not grow gills.
Women are more vulnerable to human papillomavirus when their own immune capacity is low or when they have an unclean sex life. The infection of the human papilloma virus can give rise to sharp wettings, mainly in female vaginas, genitals, anals and cervicals. As the condition evolves, thalliums of varying sizes are found during the examination. Sexual life is the main mode of transmission of sharp hyenas, and as human papilloma virus does not normally attack internal organs, it usually does not grow in female uterus.
Pictures of early chicken coronary sharp hysteria.
A research paper by the Yuga Institute of HIV Medicine, Nanjing, published in the Chinese Journal of Sex Sciences, 2019: The use of patented Chinese prescriptions for the treatment of a large-sized anal hysteria.
The aim is to explore new methods of off-the-shelf treatment of large, sharp and humid herbs in patented prescriptions. The methodology is based on the study of a case of a huge, sharp and humid anal week treated by the Yoga Institute of HIV Medicine in Nanjing in June 2017. Using patented Chinese preparations, patients are given a week-long treatment to observe and record their return. As a result, the patient was male, 52 years old, and had anal dysentery for 0.5 years. Medical examination: The anal door is covered by a length of 165 mm, with a diameter of 113 mm and a fragrance, and is diagnosed by pathology as sharp and wet. After three weeks of treatment, only 30 mm left and 16 mm left. The 8th week of the visit, the skin was completely removed and the skin returned to normal. Promulgated off-the-shelf washing of Chinese pharmacists has opened up a new treatment for large-scale, sharp-wetting treatment.
This paper, which was uploaded by Lee Xing Chun of the Yucheng Institute of HIV Medicine in Nanjing, is available only for the general medical knowledge, and any advice on disease or medication is not a substitute for an in-person diagnosis by a medical practitioner. In case of infringement, the link is deleted.